SAN ANTONIO (AP) - Connecticut has won 'em all this season, and Stanford has won 'em all except a game against the Huskies.

So it's only fitting that the women's national championship comes down to a rematch between them.

"I personally just want to play the best," UConn star Maya Moore said. "I want to be challenged, I want to compete, and Stanford has proven themselves to be that team."

Connecticut will be going for its 78th consecutive win and a second straight unbeaten season, which has never happened in women's college basketball. Not that the Huskies need reasons to be confident, but it can only help knowing they've already beaten the Cardinal once this season and in the Final Four last year.

"The matchup doesn't matter to us," center Tina Charles said. "Whoever is going to be in the way, that's who we're going to have to go up against. It's nothing personal or anything like that."

The Huskies certainly know how good the Cardinal are.

Stanford gave UConn its toughest game this season, losing by 12, and was the last team to beat Connecticut, back in the 2008 national semifinals.

Plus, Cardinal players have the fun of knowing they are the underdogs - even one that's 36-1 and whose star, Nnemkadi Ogwumike, is coming off a 38-point performance, the second-most points in Final Four history.

She also offered up this theory: "Say we play 10 times. Probability might be that their team would win the majority of the time, but all we have to do is win one game. One time, 40 minutes. I think it is doable."

This will be the sixth time the women's championship is decided by teams that finished the regular season 1-2 in The Associated Press poll. It last happened in 2002, also at the Alamodome.

The top-ranked team has won four of the five matchups, the lone exception being USC in 1983. Connecticut has been the No. 1 prevailing the last two times, in that '02 game and also in '00.

Stanford played first and was up by 16 midway through the second half, only to find its lead trimmed to three with 16 seconds left. Ogwumike broke free for a layup that sealed it.

UConn led by only five early in the second half, with a loud crowd cheering on Baylor. But Griner alone couldn't make up for the duo of Moore and Charles. Moore chased Ogwumike's scoring mark, finishing just short with 34 points, and Charles added 21 the day after she was named national player of the year by the Associated Press.

UConn coach Geno Auriemma wasn't happy at how little the rest of his club chipped in. That led him to gush with praise for Stanford, saying "they may be the hardest team to play against in America - for us, anyway, because of all the offensive players they have."

Then he heard the Cardinal made only one of 15 3-point tries against Oklahoma.

"Good, they stunk, too," he said, laughing. "Maybe the first team to 50 points wins Tuesday. Why don't we do that?"